Senate Republicans’ health care bill, long-awaited and shrouded in secrecy throughout its crafting, was revealed Thursday with hopes for a vote on the measure in short order.

The proposed "Better Care Reconciliation Act" would end the Affordable Care Act's penalties for people not buying health insurance, scuttle a set of tax increases, implement a more-gradual but deep curtailing of Medicaid expansion and cut federal reimbursements to Planned Parenthood for a year.

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But some senators expressed reservations and said they would oppose the bill, putting its passage into jeopardy. Sens. Rand Paul of Kentucky, Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, Ted Cruz of Texas and Mike Lee of Utah said in a joint statement they're "not ready to vote for this bill." Nevada's Dean Heller also said he has "serious concerns" and wants to be confer with his state's governor.

"I don't think there's anybody in America that's more against Obamacare than myself. ... I just didn't run on Obamacare lite," Paul said.

Meanwhile, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell lambasted 2010's Obamacare law, which has seen major insurers leave marketplaces across the country in recent weeks, saying the law "teeters on the edge of total collapse."

"We've long called for a better way forward, and we've engaged in intensive talks on how to get there," McConnell said from the Senate floor.

The measure’s crafting behind closed doors was met with criticism by both parties, with many Republicans seeing the bill for the first time Thursday morning. McConnell’s hoped-for vote within a week is likely to be met with significant resistance from Democrats, and some Republicans hinted they may not be willing to vote for the bill without more time to review the measure and gauge their constituents' feelings.

"It'll be hard to pass the bill -- lot of differing points of view -- and one week may not be enough time," Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah told CNN. "It's a real problem."

Minority Leader Chuck Schumer lashed out against the bill later on the floor, labeling it a tax break for wealthy Americans and warning against the cuts to Medicaid. In a tweet, the Democratic senator from New York said the bill "strips away protections from the [people] who need them most in order to give a tax break to those who need it least."

This #Trumpcare bill strips away protections from the ppl who need them most in order to give a tax break to those who need it least.

"We live in the wealthiest country on Earth," he said. "Surely, we can do better than the Republican plan."

Protesters were outside of McConnell's Senate office not long after the release of the draft, chanting "no cuts to Medicaid." Some were even dragged from the office by Capitol police, and ABC News reporter Mariam Khan tweeted that there was blood on the floor.

Now that the bill is public, a review from the bipartisan Congressional Budget Office is expected in the coming days. That score could have a major impact as McConnell seeks to secure 50 votes to ensure passage of the measure by the July 4 recess. Republicans hold a 52-seat advantage in the Senate and a potential tie-breaking vote from Vice President Mike Pence. The CBO said the House bill would leave 23 million people more uninsured by 2026 than under Obamacare.

The Washington Post, citing two GOP sources, said McConnell could bring the measure to a vote next week even if he doesn't have the votes, though some believe that he's just trying to press his colleagues to support the bill.

Among the major differences between the Senate’s bill and the House’s is linking federal subsidies to income, as Obamacare does, rather than age.

The House’s bill had a rocky road to passage, with Speaker Paul Ryan pulling an earlier version before it could reach the floor. President Donald Trump recently called the measure “mean” and has since been asking for a more compassionate Senate bill.

“Obamacare is dead, and we’re putting a plan out today that is going to be negotiated,” Trump said Thursday at the White House. "We’d love to have some Democrats’ support, but they’re obstructionists. ... It’s going to be very good. A little negotiation, but it’s going to be great."

At a rally Wednesday night in Iowa, the president said he wanted to see a bill with "heart." Democrats on the Senate floor are already using those words against him.